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Laney defense shuts out Butler

Laney 43, Butler 0

Laney's DeMarcus Nunnally looks for yardage. The Wildcats shut out Butler for the fourth time in a row.

Laney's Quinton Hall gets his helmet knocked off as he is tackled by Butler defenders Anthony Cannon (left) and Jerald Cater (right) on Friday night. The Wildcats had 227 yards on the ground in the season-opening rout.

Laney's George Meyers led all rushers with 68 yards on 11 carries. The Wildcats offense played on a short field all night.

Butler's Isaiah Lambert tries to pick up some yardage against Laney on Friday night.

Laney football coach Lemuel Lackey raised his eyebrow.

It wasn’t out of surprise. It was because of how much his team’s defensive intensity Friday night mirrored its performance in summer practice.

The Wildcats held the Bulldogs to negative yards of offense in a 43-0 home win.

Laney, playing Butler for the first time since 2007, has shut out the Bulldogs in each of the past four meetings.

“It was stellar. Stellar,” Lackey said of his defense.

“I thought defensively, we were about as prepared as you can get for a team. We felt we had a handle on most of what they were trying to do.”

Laney (1-0) used its speed to bottle up Butler in the backfield. Jeremy Smith had two interceptions for the Wildcats.

Butler had only three first downs in the game. One was on a defensive penalty and another was after the Bulldogs recovered a fumble that traveled forward enough to pick up the first down.

Butler had two huge losses on running plays – the first on a fourth down play, the other on a 16-yard loss for a safety – to halt any progress.The Bulldogs’ leading rusher was Fernando Shelton, who had 24 yards.

Laney’s defensive dominance allowed the offense to take advantage of the short fields. It scored five touchdowns on drives of fewer than 50 yards.

The Wildcats used mostly their ground game to find success, with small but quick George Myers juking his way to 68 yards. DeMarcus Nunnally had 64 yards and Deondre Walker added 46.

“We got to pick ourselves back up and go back to work,” said Myron Newton, who coached his first game as the Bulldogs’ new head coach. “The effort wasn’t there. They had worked so hard, and that is what’s so disappointing.”

LANEY 43, BUTLER 0

PLAY OF THE GAME: As one example of Laney’s defensive greatness, the Wildcats nearly got a safety – it did get one later – in the third quarter when they tackled Butler’s Fernando Shelton almost immediately after he got the ball.